The South Jersey AIDS Alliance will distribute the drug free to users and others to help prevent accidental overdose. Georgett Watson is Chief Operations Officer of the Alliance.

"A lot of our program participants don't see doctors on a regular basis and they don't have insurance. We may be the only medical care they get coming to see our nurse on a regular basis... There's a stigma around being an injection drug user, so they avoid going to doctors or they are homeless. Or they don't have insurance, so there would be no other way for them to aqcuire the drug," he said.

David Humes, who lives in Delaware, supports making Naloxone more readily available. His son died of an overdose after his friends left him in the parking lot of a hospital.

"In the instance of my son's dealth- some people- had they had access to it their on the spot- could have administered the drug or call 911-administered the drug and could have saved his life," Humes said

The Drug Policy Alliance has donated $25,000 to the South Jersey AIDS Alliance for distribution of the drug.

New Jersey's Overdose Prevention Act, signed in May, increases access to Naloxone and allows laypeople to administer the drug. Sixteen states and the District of Columbia have similar laws.